“It’s getting to three months, where is my sister? Whether she is alive or not we don’t know anything. We are joking with this guy [key suspect]…what is going on in Ghana here? Seriously, we don’t understand,” said Rebecca Quayson, a sister of one of the missing young ladies, Ruth Love Quayson.

The key lead in the suspected kidnapping cases that happened in Takoradi, the Western Region capital, revealed in court Monday that a police investigator helped him break away from police custody.

Police believe is the leader behind three kidnap cases reported in the Sekondi-Takoradi metropolis from October to December 2018.

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Samuel Oudotek Wills told the court on Monday that he does not know the name of the said officer but he can identify him.

Besides that officer, the suspect said one Kwesi helped him with oil which facilitated his cutting of the metal bars used to barricade the windows of the cell.

Mr. Wills, however, noted that he is not aware of the current location of the said Kwesi and pleaded for some time from the court to locate him.

Wills, a Nigerian national, is currently in Accra helping the police with investigations into the whereabouts of the three missing ladies: Priscilla Mantebea Koranchie, Priscilla Blessing Bentum and Ruth Love Quayson.

After the court hearing on Monday, Rebecca Quayson said the police are not doing enough.

“If we don’t hear anything by end of this week, seriously we will do something…because we can’t take this anymore. It’s like they are joking with us,” she said.

Closing in on kidnappers

Chairman of Parliament’s Defence and Interior Committee has defended the police’s handling of the kidnapping of three girls in Takoradi, insisting they are doing their best.

Seth Acheampong said they are on course to helping find the missing girls and reuniting them with their families.

“The bottom line is for them to go after the leads that they are getting…we need to understand and appreciate the standard operating procedures of investigations,” he told Joy News’ last month.

According to him, it is not right for the police to tell the public what leads they have as that will compromise the investigation and alert the perpetrators to cover their tracks.